Home arrow Document
     
   
Issue A&A
Volume 500, Number 3, June IV 2009
Page(s) 1143 - 1155
Section Stellar structure and evolution
DOI 10.1051/0004-6361/200810095
Published online 30 January 2009

A&A 500, 1143-1155 (2009)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/200810095

The C/O ratio at low metallicity: constraints on early chemical evolution from observations of Galactic halo stars

D. Fabbian1, 2, P. E. Nissen3, M. Asplund4, M. Pettini5, and C. Akerman5

1  Research School of Astronomy & Astrophysics, The Australian National University, Mount Stromlo Observatory, Cotter Road, Weston ACT 2611, Australia
2  Current address: Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias, Calle via Láctea s/n, E38205, La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain
    e-mail: damian@iac.es
3  Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Aarhus, 8000 Aarhus C, Denmark
4  Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, Postfach 1317, 85741 Garching b. München, Germany
5  Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0HA, UK

Received 30 April 2008 / Accepted 12 September 2008

Abstract
Aims. We present new measurements of the abundances of carbon and oxygen derived from high-excitation C I and O I absorption lines in metal-poor halo stars, with the aim of clarifying the main sources of these two elements in the early stages of the chemical enrichment of the Galaxy.
Methods. We target 15 new stars compared to our previous study, with an emphasis on additional C/O determinations in the crucial metallicity range -3 $\la$ [Fe/H]$\la$ -2. The stellar effective temperatures were estimated from the profile of the H$\beta$ line. Departures from local thermodynamic equilibrium were accounted for in the line formation for both carbon and oxygen. The non-LTE effects are very strong at the lowest metallicities but, contrary to what has sometimes been assumed in the past due to a simplified assessment, of different degrees for the two elements. In addition, for the 28 stars with [Fe/H] < -1 previously analysed, stellar parameters were re-derived and non-LTE corrections applied in the same fashion as for the rest of our sample, giving consistent abundances for 43 halo stars in total.
Results. The new observations and non-LTE calculations strengthen previous suggestions of an upturn in C/O towards lower metallicity (particularly for [O/H] $\la$ -2). The C/O values derived for these very metal-poor stars are, however, sensitive to excitation via the still poorly quantified inelastic H collisions. While these do not significantly affect the non-LTE results for C I, they greatly modify the O I outcome. Adopting the H collisional cross-sections estimated from the classical Drawin formula leads to [C/O] $\approx$ 0 at [O/H] $\approx$ -3. To remove the upturn in C/O, near-LTE formation for O I lines would be required, which could only happen if the H collisional efficiency with the Drawin recipe is underestimated by factors of up to several tens of times, a possibility which we consider unlikely.
Conclusions. The high C/O values derived at the lowest metallicities may be revealing the fingerprints of Population III stars or may signal rotationally-aided nucleosynthesis in more normal Population II stars.


Key words: stars: abundances -- stars: late-type -- Galaxy: abundances -- Galaxy: evolution



© ESO 2009


What is OpenURL?